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The Palms Condos for Sale

Interior Shots of the Parker Palm Springs Hotel & Resort by Dee Adams

Located just south of Myrtle Beach is Pawleys Island. The region is
Cabo San Lucas is a popular spot for celebrities, or anyone looking for warm weather, sunshine and beautiful surroundings. It is an ideal spot if you are planning for Spring Break, a getaway, or a destination wedding site.

There are many resorts and condos available, and if you put a little time into it you can find some great deals. On a recent trip, my family was able to book a privately owned condo at the Villa La Estancia. We got a great deal on an enormous two bedroom with a terrace and ocean view. The kitchen enabled us to save money by having several meals, especially breakfast and lunch, in our condo. The Villa is also nicely located within walking distance of the downtown area and many restaurants and activities.

We rented a car which I probably wouldn’t do again, because we didn’t use it. There are some activities not within walking distance, but you can easily arrange any transportation you may require. In addition, there was a constant availability of water taxis on Medano Beach for transportation to downtown destinations. Hiking, horseback riding, rock climbing, off-road adventures and sport fishing are just a few of the many activities on and around Cabo.

The Villa La Estancia has elegant and contemporary accommodations. It also features a large, beautiful infinity pool, fitness room, and spa services. There is a very convenient mini-mall with all of the items you will need to stock your kitchen. In the same area are several gift shops, a very popular ice crème stand, video rental and nice selection of local artist’s Mexican crafts for sale.

There are two restaurants at Villa La Estancia. La Parilla, is the casual restaurant with both poolside seated dining and a fun swim up bar. Kids and adults love this and it really makes the whole area festive. La Parilla is a good place for breakfast, lunch or dinner and of course, snacks and drinks. The more formal restaurant is La Casona. La Casona offers dining both inside, and on the terrace. You can have a wonderful breakfast buffet here or a romantic and delicious dinner. They feature Kobe steak and have a fresh catch of the day, as well as several accompaniments. Our party went deep sea fishing and the chef was able to prepare their catch of tuna three different ways for our dinner. Very cool for the fishermen!

Downtown Cabo is an area where there are lots of the usual tourist shops, some good duty free shopping, and several restaurants and bars. We had two favorite restaurants. Casa Rafael’s is a wonderful local restaurant with live music and fantastic food, set among tropical palms and Mexican crafts. Mocambo’s is located in a simple concrete building, but the reason to go is for the delicious, authentic food at reasonable prices. This is were the locals eat. If you get tired of Mexican cuisine, track down the Ruth’s Chris Steakhouse. It isn’t authentic Mexican, but it is impossible to get a bad meal here.

A walk along the marina at Cabo is spectacular, with ships of all shapes and sizes. This is where you can directly arrange for any sport fishing or whale watching activities. You can also take a water taxi over to nearby Lover’s Beach for a look at the sea lions who frolic there daily. Our water taxi driver shared with us that locals call the other side of Lover’s Beach, “Divorce Beach”. I’m not sure who could go to romantic Cabo and think about divorce, but it makes for a cute story!

Near the marina is also a very large indoor market. This is the place to stock up on Mexican pottery, sterling silver jewelry, brightly colored, embroidered Mexican blouses and dresses, carved wooden items and an array of other souvenirs. There are many, many vendors and they love to barter. You are sure to get a great deal on whatever your heart desires.

The perfect weather, delicious Mexican food, shopping and unique local attractions make Cabo a perfect spot. If you are looking for a little bit of paradise on earth, try Cabo San Lucas Mexico.

recognized for its organic attractiveness. The spot low density constructing policy has managed to preserve many of the areas pure habitats. The real Island is only a couple of miles lengthy and is a normal barrier island. At one time the entire Pawleys Island spot was inhabited by large rice plantations. You’ll be able to still see some reminiscent in the past on some from the regional golf courses.

Pawleys Island Vacation Rentals

Obviously an location this gorgeous can be a very common spot for family vacation rentals. Together with the minimal variety of condos in Pawleys Island there are quite handful of resorts in the region. The largest and most popular Pawleys Island Trip resort is Litchfield by the Sea. The most well-known vacation leases are seaside entrance properties on the is and houses inside Litchfield Seashore area.

Pawleys Island Home Administration

With the spot being so small you can find couple of residence management firms inside the area. If you might be seeking a home management company it’s best to find a firm that fits with the wants and objectives of the premises and also understands what the highest and ideal use of one’s home is.
The Palms Rentals

hyperunsure in foreclosures on fevereiro 21 2011 » 0 comments

Myrtle Beach homes

Condos, South Beach, Miami, Florida by hanneorla

Together with all the information and facts available regarding real estate today, it is easy to be overwhelmed.This site is the one thorough Myrtle Beach Short Salessource that provides every thing you’ll need for selling or buying property in the Myrtle Beach area. Here you are able to search the MLS for all Myrtle Beach real estate, such as Carolina Forest, Myrtle Beach Luxury Homes, Myrtle Beach Land, New Homes in Myrtle Beach, as well as properties in the cities of North Myrtle Beach, Surfside Beach, Murrells Inlet, Garden City, and Little River. Whatever your interest in Myrtle Beach Real Estate, this is the convenient and organized resource for all the information you will need! As well as the ease of seeking all available properties, here you will find information for the current local market, recommendations on preparing your house to sell, what to expect when buying a house, information on local communities, retail areas, schools, entertainment, my Myrtle Beach Real Estate Blog and much, much more! Search Myrtle Beach MLS Buy Myrtle Beach Real Estate offers an extensive variety of properties to choose from, in varying price points. I am a seasoned Myrtle Beach REALTOR who is a professional in the area as well as the properties available. I will show you through the home purchasing process and speed up your search. Most of all, I will ask you questions, listen to your requirements, and find the properties that best meet your needs. I’ll get the deal done, with your best interest at heart! To keep offering the unparalleled level of service I promise to all or any of my clients, I reserve my services for serious buyers and investors who are qualified and ready to purchase property within the Myrtle Beach area. Please call or e mail me personally with virtually any inquiries you could have, and make use of each of the features this website offers! I look forward to dealing with you! Sell When selling your Myrtle Beach Real Estate, you want a experienced local Real estate agent to offer the information and expertise to offer your home, along with the the majority of aggressive and individual marketing and advertising readily available for your property. My partner and i supply my sellers with a comprehensive technique encompassing my personal vast familiarity with the neighborhood marketplace and wide ranging promotion that is first rate. Over 90% of house buyers start their search for real estate on the web. The cornerstone of my personal marketing and advertising strategy takes advantage of the entire power of the web with higher internet search engine positioning. Every property that i list is actually showcased on my site along with photos, points, as well as detailed info, in addition to blogs emphasizing the home, allowing your home to draw the perfect buyer. I also blend digital advertisement with the greatest placement in Myrtle Beach Real-estate publications as well as neighborhood newspaper publishers to insure the biggest exposure easy for your property!

New inspiration: Very Modern Home Full Of Light And Color by New Inspiration Home Design

To offer your own Myrtle Beach Real-estate swiftly, effectively, and for the highest price, you must be represented by an agent who is thoroughly acquainted with the area marketplace, and can give you individualized guidance as well as service. I will be that realtor! I’ll guide you in planning your home for sale, give you will all of the information you will need, enable you to help to make your home differentiate themselves from everyone else, as well as assist you in pricing your house to market for the right price in the proper schedule! Myrtle Beach Homes & Condos Myrtle Beach High end Houses and Condos For SaleWhether transferring to Myrtle Beach, improving or downsizing from your current property, investing in a home, or perhaps searching for the perfect vacation home with regard to you and your family, Myrtle Beach has just what you are searching for! This area features high-end residential areas such as Grande Dunes, seaside condominiums all along The Strand, family neighborhoods in Carolina Forest, and every thing in between. The location is growing and change, bringing forth brand new communities in order to fill the populations needs, like the Market Common and Withers Preserve. A new idea to Myrtle Beach, The Market Common is a town center like neighborhood, complete with residential, retail, dining, and shopping spaces. Withers Preserve is a progression of different communities next to The Market Common, providing homes many different home styles to pick from. With over a hundred golf courses in the area, there are plenty of golf course communities producing Myrtle Beach a golf players heaven. World class courses are playable year-round, and there are lots of properties available for the avid player. From golf villas on the fairways of The World Tour, to beautiful sprawling homes on the greens of Myrtle Beach National and Barefoot Resort, there’s a ideal home for you! For additional information regarding any Myrtle Beach area homes or condos, get in touch today. Myrtle Beach Luxury Homes & Condos Grande Dunes Homes and Condos For SaleIn the past svereal years, Myrtle Beach High end Real-estate has risen to an unparalleled degree. Unique and  elegant developments like the Dunes as well as the communities of Grande Dunes tend to be unparalleled in their opulence.

Real Estate by Studio One-One

Communities such as these give residents magnificently appointed palatial houses along with every update possible, as well as every amenity you can think of. Golf courses, oceanfront clubs, tennis courts, spas and fitness centers – all state-of-the-art. Not to mention a further peace of mind regarding gated entries with private security. If you are looking for that ultimate in luxury seaside living and also the lifestyle that goes in addition to it, i want to educates you on Myrtle Beach Luxury Real-estate. Get in touch today! Myrtle Beach Beachfront Homes & Condos If waking up to the noise of the sea ocean crashing and taking only steps for the sand is the concept of bliss, welcome to Myrtle Beach! Myrtle Beach offers an array of wonderfulseaside houses and also condos. Real estate locally offer features to owners for example outdoor and indoor swimming, onsite dining places as well as bars, leasing programs, and more. New Homes in Myrtle Beach Building contractors and also developers tend to be creating wonderful new local communities in Myrtle Beach, providing buyers as well as buyers together with Myrtle Beach Jason Morris a way to join over a new residence purchase

hyperunsure in myrtle beach on fevereiro 13 2011 » 0 comments

Columbia SC

Columbia University, New York City by chaim zvi

Columbia SC Foreclosures

Columbia SC Short Sales

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Gawker Media Community Policy

These are our sites, and we reserve the right to moderate the discussion. The basic rules are standard: An attack on authors or other commenters is unlikely to make you popular. Think before you disparage social or ethnic groups. Don’t spam. Don’t post pornography or copyrighted imagery. Stay on topic.

That said, the community policy of Gawker Media is forgiving. If your criticism is articulate, it will likely get through. We dole it out; we can take it. What do we mean by articulate? Support your point with argument, facts and citations. Good grammar and spelling also help.

Got questions? Need answers? See our FAQ and site-specific community guidelines.

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hyperunsure in Sem categoria on dezembro 10 2010 » 0 comments

Hoa Management issues

Las Vegas Condo interior design 5 by ONE Las Vegas

Myrtle Beach Homes for Sale

Under fire for violent rhetoric and at least two cases in which fans of his nationally televised conspiracy rants went on shooting sprees against cops, Glenn Beck is doubling down on guns.

Exactly one week before Election Day, the Fox News host is traveling to Colorado to speak on behalf of a self-proclaimed “radical” gun rights group that has compared the rival National Rifle Association to the appeasement of Neville Chamberlain and which lobbied ferociously against Colorado’s efforts to pass gun laws in response to the 1999 massacre of 13 people at Columbine High School.

The Rocky Mountain Gun Owners — founded by Colorado-based GOP activist Dudley Brown who also runs a national umbrella group called the National Association for Gun Rights — is bringing Beck to Colorado Springs as part of a western swing for Beck that includes the right-wing media maven’s standard high ticket prices and the sponsorship of an odd assortment of extreme right-wing groups.

Here’s Brown’s official announcement of the Oct. 26 event:

On Tuesday evening, October 26th, at the Colorado Springs World Arena, Rocky Mountain Gun Owners is proud to sponsor…Glenn Beck! Barely two weeks from today, Glenn Beck and I will be speaking to a group of thousands of conservatively-minded citizens.Seating is limited so you’ll have to act quickly.

The event — which includes a $500 a person meet-and-greet with Beck – is described as a fundraiser for something called “The Constitutional Challenge,” a proposed right-wing educational program for kids that doesn’t seem to exist yet but is under development from Utah conservative Stephen Pratt, who claims he helped the 1960s-era ultra-conservative John-Birch-style activist Cleon Skoussen write The 5,000 Year Leap, a 30-year-old tome that argues that America is a Christian nation and has been boosted by Beck onto the best-seller list.

But in associatiing with Brown’s gun lobby, Beck is now working with pro-gun groups that are on the extreme right of the NRA.

“We’re not afraid to be called radicals on the gun issue,” Brown said in a 2001 interview with Westword. “Because that’s what we are.” His Rocky Mountain Gun Owners and the NAGR routinely campaign against politicians with an “A” rating from the NRA as being too soft on guns; “The NRA promotes the same policies as Neville Chamberlain : appeasement,” Brown has said. “You know — if we just give them, they’ll be happy.? In fighting a state law to require gun-show background checks after the Columbine tragedy, Brown sounded a tad Beckian when he said “We feel like the Jews did in Nazi Germany.”

The NAGR website is larded with conspiracy mumbo-jumbo suggesting that President Barack Obama or his administration are moving to confiscate guns or ammo, even though in the real world the Democratic president has made no moves on gun control during his 20 months in the White House. The NAGR is very aggressive in the fundraising department. The umbrella group’s action items claim that the Environmental Protection Agency is moving to ban ammo and that Obama and Hillary Clinton are working with the UN to ban guns.

Ironically, the notion that Obama is planning to confiscate Americans’ guns was adopted by an unemployed and unstable Pittsburgh man, Richard Poplawski, who proceeded to shoot and kill three Pittsburgh police officers who showed up at his home during a domestic dispute in April 2009. As I reported extensively in my new book The Backlash: Right-Wing Radicals, High-Def Hucksters and Paranoid Politics in the Age of Obama, Poplawski was a fan who, according to his best friend, “loved Glenn Beck” and posted online a video of Beck and Rep. Ron Paul talking on Fox News Channel about the discredited and ridiculous theory of so-called “FEMA camps” for rounding up citizens.

Last week, Media Matters for America reported that another gunman, California’s Byron Williams, who traded gunfire with police officers in Oakland and said he was on a violent mission against the liberal Tides Foundation, a group that has been frequently attacked on Beck’s program, also cited the FNC host as an inspiration, saying that Beck’s theories “blew my mind.” Beck’s increasingly inflammatory rhetoric has drawn ire from police union leaders and the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence.

After the Williams’ story broke, Beck condemned an attack on gays in the Bronx and seemed to be an anti-violence campaign — that only lasted for a day or so. Before last week was over, Beck said that anyone trying to force a vaccine on his family would meet “Mr. Smith and Mr. Wesson,” and then he launched into yet another diatribe against the Tides Foundation. Now, he heads west to rally support for a radical, no-holds-barred pro-gun group — raising thousands of dollars, and kicking the rhetorical firepower up a notch higher. 

Thursday, November 11, 2010: The candy princess herself, Dylan Lauren of NYC’s Dylan’s Candy Bar, will make her Chocolate Show debut this year as she promotes her new book, Unwrap Your Sweet Life, with a book signing at the Barnes & Noble Booksellers booth at 1pm. Just before, at noon, Dylan will kick off the culinary demonstrations in the Dacor Culinary Kitchen Theater I. Additionally, at 4pm, Food Landscapes author and photographer Carl Warner will demonstrate how he makes scenic displays completely out of food and especially chocolate, including the 6-foot train display featured at the Chocolate Show. NYC’s famed Dessert Truck owners Jerome Chang and Vincent Jaoura will also be on hand at 5pm to demonstrate the perfect chocolate chip cookie, and speaking of cookies, Momofuku Milk Bar’s Christina Tosi will also be on site for a 12:30pm demonstration in the Dacor Culinary Kitchen Theater II. A highlight of this year’s Chocolate Show is sure to be “Chocolate Deconstructed” by the National Confectioners Association, also in Theater II, at 2:30pm

Friday, November 12, 2010: Food Network takes center stage at the Chocolate Show this year as Anne Thornton, host of the new series “Dessert First,” demonstrates to the Theater I crowd at 4pm. Chocolate veterans Jacques Torres (3pm), Jansen Chan of Oceana (5pm) and Martin Howard (6pm), otherwise known as “Chocolatina,” will all be on hand to show off their chocolate skills. And Del Posto’s Brooks Headley (5:30pm, Theater II) will prove that chocolate and eggplant can coexist with his Eggplant Chocolate Crostata.

Saturday, November 13, 2010: Chocolate Show alums Nick Malgieri (12pm), of the Institute for Culinary Education and François Payard (2pm) return for more demos, while the Peanut Butter & Co. (1pm) crew will illustrate why peanut butter and chocolate are such good friends. Meanwhile, Christophe Mazeaud (10:30am) of Barry Callebaut will whip up some Mexican Hot Chocolate while Billy’s Bakery (1:30pm) will prepare chocolate cupcakes, both in Theater II.

Sunday, November 14, 2010: The stars of Bravo’s “Top Chef: Just Desserts,” will be hosting and presenting on the last day of the Chocolate Show (but luckily no judging this time around). Zac Young (2pm), a top contender this season and pastry chef at Flex Mussels in NYC will demonstrate Chocolate Cream Pie “on its side.” Jean-Georges’ Executive Pastry Chef and lead judge on “Top Chef: Just Desserts,” Johnny Iuzzini (3pm), will be demonstrating how to make four-star desserts at home. Rounding out the Bravo bunch, lifestyle contributor and judge Danielle Kyrillos will emcee the afternoon’s activities.

Pawleys Island foreclosures

hyperunsure in Sem categoria on novembro 17 2010 » 0 comments

Obamas Foreclosure Problems

Gimme Hope Obama by screenpunk

Myrtle Beach Homes for Sale

Let’s not shoot the messenger. Yes, the tea party victors are a mixed bag espousing often contradictory and at times weird positions, the source of their funding is questionable and their proposed solutions are vague and at times downright nutty. But they represent the most significant political response to the economic pain that has traumatized swaths of the nation at a time when so-called progressives have been reduced to abject impotence by their deference to a Democratic president.

Barack Obama deserved the rebuke he received at the polls for a failed economic policy that consisted of throwing trillions at Wall Street but getting nothing in return. His amen chorus in the media is quick to blame everyone but the president for his sharp reversal of fortunes. But it is not the fault of tea party Republicans that they responded to the rage out there over lost jobs and homes while the president remained indifferent to the many who are suffering.

At a time when, as a Washington Post poll reported last week, 53 percent of Americans fear they can’t make next month’s mortgage or rent payment, the president chirped inanely to Jon Stewart that his top economics adviser, Lawrence Summers, who was paid $8 million by Wall Street firms while advising candidate Obama, had done a “heckuva job” in helping avoid another Great Depression. What kind of consolation is that for the 50 million Americans who have lost their homes or are struggling to pay off mortgages that are “underwater”? The banks have been made whole by the Fed, providing virtually interest-free money while purchasing trillions of dollars of the banks’ toxic assets. Yet the financial industry response has been what Paul Volcker has called a “liquidity trap” — denying loans for business investment or the refinancing necessary to keep people in their homes.

Instead of meeting that crisis head-on with a temporary moratorium on housing foreclosures, as more than half of those surveyed by the Post wanted, the president summarily turned down that sensible proposal. Instead he attempted to shift the focus to his tepid health care reform and was surprised that many voters didn’t think he did them a favor by locking them into insurance programs not governed by cost controls. Health care reform was viewed by many voters with the same disdain with which they reacted to the underfunded and unfocused stimulus program. Neither seems relevant to turning around an economy that a huge majority feels is getting worse, according to Election Day exit polls.

That is a problem that is not obvious to the power elites whom the leaders of both political parties serve or to the high-paid media pundits who cheer them on. The tea party revolt, ragged as it is, fed on a massive populist outrage that so-called progressives had failed to respond to because of their allegiance to Obama. As a result the Democrats squandered the hopes of their base, which rewarded the party with a paltry turnout at polling stations.

But it now remains for the tea party victors to prove that they are a viable alternative, or by the next election they too will find that their base of support has evaporated. This should be of great concern to the libertarian wing of that movement, which scored a considerable victory and a much-enhanced national presence with Rand Paul’s Senate victory in Kentucky. Will he stick to his promise to hold the Federal Reserve accountable and oppose the continuing favors to Wall Street that he has blasted as “a transfer of wealth from those who have earned to those who have squandered”?

The tea party is now in the awkward position previously occupied by the Obama hope crusade of having to deliver and will suffer a similar political fate if it fails to deal with the economic crisis. In particular, the Republicans who will control the House, thanks to the tea party, must come up with proposals to solve the housing crisis or they will stand exposed as political opportunists who intend to exploit rather than deal with the economic anxiety felt not only by their base but much of the country.

Some Democratic leaders will urge Obama to follow President Bill Clinton’s lead after his party’s electoral reversal in the 1994 election and move even further to the right to strengthen his prospects for re-election. It was that opportunistic shift by Clinton that led to his signing off on the radical deregulation of the financial industry that caused the economic meltdown. If Obama follows such advice it will spell further disaster for the nation.

Top Stories

President Obama supports the Fed’s quantitative easing plan, reports Neil Irwin: “Speaking at a news conference in New Delhi with Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, Obama stressed that the Fed acts independently from his administration but left little doubt that he has Chairman Ben S. Bernanke’s back. ‘The Fed’s mandate, my mandate, is to grow our economy. And that’s not just good for the United States, that’s good for the world as a whole,’ Obama said Monday. ‘The worst thing that could happen to the world economy … is if we end up being stuck with no growth or very limited growth. And I think that’s the Fed’s concern, and that’s my concern as well.’”

The U.S. is trying to conclude a free trade agreement with South Korea, reports Howard Schneider: “By the boatload, South Korea ships half-finished flat-panel televisions and other gadgets to Korean-owned factories in China, where they are assembled by lower-paid Chinese workers and sent abroad to the United States and elsewhere. This pattern helps run up the U.S. trade deficit with China while taking international pressure off South Korea to revamp its trade practices. … For the United States, an agreement could represent the most-promising chapter in a long effort to recalibrate the balance of trade between the Western developed world and the world’s manufacturing center in Asia.”

Courts are ruling in favor of homeowners in cases with faulty foreclosure paperwork, reports Ariana Eunjung Cha: “A year ago, Long Island Judge Jeffrey Spinner concluded that a mortgage company’s paperwork in a foreclosure case was so flawed and its behavior in negotiations with the borrower so “repugnant” that he erased the family’s $292,500 debt and gave the house back for free. The judgment in favor of the homeowner, Diane Yano-Horoski, which is being appealed, has alarmed the nation’s biggest lenders, who say it could establish a dramatic new legal precedent and roil the nation’s foreclosure system.”

Swedish pop interlude: Air France’s “Collapsing at Your Doorstep”.

Still to come: Most reject the World Bank president’s gold standard proposal; an investigator says cost-cutting didn’t cause the BP oil spill; the Supreme Court rejects a challenge to health-care reform; and if you want your cat to paw at your iPhone, there’s an app for that.

Economy/FinReg

Economists and policymakers are dismissing World Bank President Robert Zoellick’s call to revive the gold standard, reports Robin Harding: “‘I think [Mr Zoellick] is living in the past, in particular in the period from 1980-92, when there was a periodic flirtation with gold,’ said Edwin Truman, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute. ‘It’s not constructive and it’s inappropriate.’ Jean-Claude Trichet, president of the European Central Bank, said that central bankers meeting in Basel had not discussed the use of gold. ‘We did not discuss the gold standard,’ he said. ‘In my memory such an idea was mentioned a long time ago by Jim Baker when he was a secretary of the Treasury in the 1980s. I have no particular comment.’”

International backlash to the Fed’s quantitative easing plan is growing.

A World Bank study shows that Western countries have targeted China with protectionist measures, reports John Miller: “Ahead of the G-20’s meeting in Seoul on Thursday and Friday, a World Bank-backed study released Monday shows the U.S., European Union and G-20 allies have recently outpaced other countries in measures that have defended domestic producers, from France’s $2.3 billion payout to its farmers in October to a South Korean program that is giving export subsidies to 100 hand-picked companies. China has been the biggest target of these measures, the study said.”

Some Democrats are urging a compromise on extending tax cuts for under-$500,000 earners.

Low business demand for loans is casting doubt on the Fed’s quantitative easing plan, reports Robin Harding: “Twenty-nine per cent of banks said that demand for loans from companies with sales below $50m had fallen, compared with only 7.1 per cent of banks that reported a rise, according to a Federal Reserve survey of senior bank loan officers. The tepid demand for loans from small businesses reduces the chance of a strong rebound in growth in 2011 and suggests that even rock-bottom interest rates and easier borrowing conditions may not persuade them to invest…Every bank reporting a decline in small business loan demand said that its customers had cut back on their investment in plant or equipment.”

The sole Fed dissenter on quantitative easing will address House Republicans.

Congress will leave hundreds of thousands without aid if it doesn’t extend unemployment insurance, writes Chad Stone: “Full federal funding will expire along with the EUC program on November 30 — even though over two-fifths of the unemployed have been looking for a job for more than 26 weeks. If that happens, all federal unemployment insurance benefits will end in 40 states, and the number of weeks available in the rest of the states will shrink significantly, as the map below shows.  Most of the several hundred thousand workers who exhaust their regular state benefits each month would receive no further help, and many of the 5 million workers now receiving federal emergency benefits would lose their remaining weeks.”

We cannot return to the gold standard, writes Martin Wolf.

The G-20 is not just split between the U.S. and China, writes Gideon Rachman: “The G20 nations face a fundamental philosophical issue — should they be looking for legally binding new agreements or should they proceed on a voluntary basis? For once, America and China – as big countries that care a lot about national sovereignty — tend to be on the same side. They are both wary of agreeing to new international legal regimes. The countries of the European Union, however, adore new international treaties and were hoping that the G20 might one day develop into the ‘planetary’ government that Mr Sarkozy spoke of. The Europeans are liable to be disappointed.”

Child prodigy interlude: The world’s best 6-year-old skateboarder.

Energy

The chief counsel of the commission investigating the BP oil spill says cost-cutting didn’t cause the spill, reports Steven Mufson: “The comments about cost run counter to those of other panels investigating the accident that triggered the massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Those inquiries have alleged that bad decisions by BP were driven by a desire to save money because the rig and its contractors were costing about $1.5 million a day and the exploration well was running behind schedule. ‘To date, we have not seen a single instance where a human being made a conscious decision to favor dollars over safety,’ said Fred H. Bartlit, Jr., general counsel for the National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and Offshore Drilling.”

Bartlit also wants the committee to have subpoena power.

A majority of senators will back legislation blocking EPA action on climate change, report Robin Bravender and Darren Samuelsohn: “At least 56 senators next year are likely to support efforts to block the Environmental Protection Agency’s plans to regulate greenhouse gas emissions, a POLITICO analysis shows. That’s just short of the 60 they’d need to overcome a filibuster, but a slew of moderate Democrats facing reelection in 2012 could put that number within reach. Democratic senators including Sherrod Brown of Ohio, Bob Casey of Pennsylvania, Debbie Stabenow of Michigan and Jon Tester of Montana haven’t supported past efforts to stall climate rules, but they could change their minds with an eye on their 2012 races.”

Oil has made its way through the gulf’s food chain.

The ranking Republican on the House climate change committee wants to preserve it, reports Patrick O’Connor: “Back in 2007, Rep. James Sensenbrenner (R., Wis.) didn’t want Congress to create a special panel to study global warming. But now that his party will control the House, he’s lobbying colleagues to keep it. His pitch: It’s the best vehicle for fighting any new rules issued by the Environmental Protection Agency. He’s also in line to be the committee’s chairman. ‘Electing a Republican House of Representatives is not enough to stop some of the administration’s most economically damaging environmental proposals,’ Mr. Sensenbrenner said in a brief statement circulated by his office today.”

Green jobs programs are training workers for positions that don’t exist, writes Monica Potts: “The American Wind Energy Association says the industry as a whole lost about 1,500 manufacturing jobs last year, leaving the number of manufacturing jobs at 18,500. Turbine installations are dropping, too, and the industry projects they will return to 2007 levels by the end of the year. That means the 40 or so facilities that produce primary turbine parts, like blades or towers, are operating below capacity, and there will be less demand for wind technicians in the near future because there will be fewer turbines for them to work on.”

Adorable animals playing with electronics interlude: An iPhone app designed as a toy for cats.

Domestic Policy

The Supreme Court rejected its first challenge to health-care reform, reports Robert Barnes: “There is no indication that Justice Elena Kagan sat out the decision on a challenge brought by a former California legislator. That could be an indication she sees no conflict in hearing cases involving health-care reform, despite her role in the Obama administration. During her confirmation hearings, Kagan said that as President Obama’s solicitor general, she had not been involved in legal strategy sessions about how to defend the health-care plan against charges that it is unconstitutional. She declined to say whether she would recuse herself if the issue reached the Supreme Court.”

States are slashing anti-smoking programs.

State governments will be able to affect health-care reform’s implementation significantly, reports N.C. Aizenman: “Although the law requires states to review ‘unreasonable’ premium increases, it will largely be up to each state to determine what that review process entails. … States will also be in a position to exert pressure on the federal government when it comes to the law’s requirement that insurers spend 80 to 85 percent of the premiums they collect to pay medical claims or otherwise improve their customers’ health. If a state thinks the requirement would cause too many insurers to drop out of its market, it can ask the Department of Health and Human Services for a waiver. Iowa and Maine have already done so, and other states are likely follow.”

House Democrats are trying to quiet the race for minority whip.

A Senate earmarks ban could pass, reports Janet Hook: “South Carolina Sen. Jim DeMint on Monday was collecting signatures on a letter calling for a vote by his fellow Senate Republicans to ban earmarks, in which spending is channeled to projects favored by individual lawmakers, outside the competitive federal funding system. House Republicans and President Barack Obama have endorsed such a ban, and a wave of Republicans who oppose earmarks were elected to the Senate last week. But Mr. DeMint’s move puts him at odds with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Kentucky Republican who has defended earmarking as a legitimate exercise of Congress’s power of the purse.”

Sen.-elect Mark Kirk could back the Disclose campaign finance bill.

A rivalry between Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor would be good for the Supreme Court, writes Noah Feldman: “Once a new appointee has fulfilled every lawyer’s ambition by making it onto the court, the next step is to become a great justice. In an insular group of highly intelligent people sentenced to work together for life, the question of leadership can be vexing. Sometimes, a justice makes his case for leadership by defining himself in subtle opposition from a colleague. The potential jockeying for position between Sotomayor and Kagan is foreshadowed by the relationship between two of the most interesting justices of the 20th century, Felix Frankfurter and Hugo Black. Their intense rivalry pushed each to heights of constitutional greatness.”

Dylan Matthews is a student at Harvard and a researcher at The Washington Post.

Myrtle Beach Homes

hyperunsure in Sem categoria on novembro 16 2010 » 0 comments

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250307 home by Andrew C Wallace

Myrtle Beach Homes for Sale

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Richard T. Gill

Richard T. Gill, in all statistical probability the only Harvard economist to sing 86 performances with the Metropolitan Opera, died on Monday…He was 82.

The article is here.  Gill wrote many widely used texts and oddly he did not begin vocal training until he was almost forty. Up until that point, he had little acquaintance with classical music and he smoked two and a half packs of cigarettes a day.  He first performed in a staging of Figaro at Harvard, directed by John Lithgow and conducted by John Adams (the John Adams).  Later, he was in the world premiere of Philip Glass's Satyagraha.  Gill continued to write and edit textbooks throughout his singing career.

In 1971 he gave up his tenure at Harvard.  In 1984-85 he hosted a 28-part PBS show on economics.  In the 1990s he wrote two books, one on population the other on the decline of the American family.  Here is Gill's proposal for a Parental Bill of Rights.  His short stories for Atlantic Monthly and The New Yorker were widely anthologized and in 2003 he published his first novel.

Here is his home page.  At the time of his death he was working on a three to four-volume autobiography.  As a Harvard undergraduate he was a successful boxer and somehow he ended up as an Assistant Dean at Harvard by age 21 and later Master of Leverett House.

Posted by Tyler Cowen on October 29, 2010 at 07:59 AM in Current Affairs, Economics, History, Music, Sports, Television, The Arts | Permalink

Comments

"an Assistant Dean at Harvard by age 21": there was something to be said for the capacity that universities once had of appointing bright youngsters, rather than insisting that first everyone be slowly ground fine in the academic mills. Presumably nowadays impatiently bright young things think "no thanks" and clear off to some other career.

Posted by: dearieme at Oct 29, 2010 8:50:56 AM

We have very different ideas about who "the John Adams" is.

Posted by: RPLong at Oct 29, 2010 8:58:33 AM

Hmmm … sounds like Sidd Finch.

BTW, a "28 part PBS show on economics?" Who has that attention span? Well, I guess if there were to be a 28 part show on economics, it would have to be on PBS.

Posted by: Ken Rhodes at Oct 29, 2010 9:03:43 AM

this guy makes me feel lazy.

Posted by: matt at Oct 29, 2010 9:08:48 AM

MY high school econ teacher showed some of those PBS videos in class (I graduated in '03). They didn't whet my appetite then, but I remember them pretty well. Probably my first decent exposure to econ.

Posted by: Jeff Holmes at Oct 29, 2010 9:42:11 AM

In that show on economics (called "Economics USA" hosted by, I think, David Schumaker), Gil was the economic analyst. In the episode on Keynes, when he talks about getting consumer spending going, one of the things that he mentions that consumers might spend money on was singing lessons. I show this video to my classes all the time and I wondered about that.

Posted by: Cyril Morong at Oct 29, 2010 9:51:34 PM

His "Economic Development: Past and Present", 1963 (3rd edition, 1973) and "Evolution of Modern Economics", 1967 were basic readings for undergraduates in our state's universities (on the south-western state of Kerala in India). I have a personal copy of his book "Economics and the Public Interest", 1968 (5th edition, 1991).

Posted by: GVV at Oct 30, 2010 11:38:43 AM

“A Quiet Place” debuted five years before John Adams' “Nixon in China” appeared on the same Houston stage — but in contrast to the way Adams’ score found new ways to set American English to music, Bernstein’s seems stuck in the past, forcing the contemporary vernacular into an older, stuffy European form.

After the Houston disaster, Bernstein and librettist Stephen Wadsworth inserted right in the middle of “A Quiet Place” the composer’s one-act opera “Trouble in Tahiti” as a flashback (originally it was performed as the first part of a double bill with “Tahiti,” because it shares many of the same characters). Musically, this transition is jarring — the sonic equivalent of putting one of Goya’s tapestry cartoons in between two of his dark, late paintings and calling it a triptych (or like splicing Woody Allen’s “Bananas” into the middle of his “Crimes and Misdemeanors”) — but it does allow Act 2 to rescue the evening.

Much of this is because of director Christopher Alden’s sleek, stylish staging and to be fair, Wadsworth and Bernstein’s revisions; but it’s also because of the simple fact that the jazzy “Trouble in Tahiti” has enduring melodies. The short 1952 opera is a fascinating precursor to “Revolutionary Road,” “Mad Men” and most of all the musical “Company” in its exploration of midcentury middle-class morals.

Alas, Act 3 of “A Quiet Place” returns to the musical idiom of Bernstein’s late atonalism, and while less grating to the ear, the drama — like in Act 1 — is inert and the psychology and sentiment is both overblown and underwhelming.

As a work of curatorial preservation (“embalming” also does come to mind), Wadsworth and Alden (not to mention City Opera) deserve credit for making “A Quiet Place” as presentable as possible.  Bernstein’s opera is certainly interesting to study for those interested in how the plot reflects aspects of his own life (the death of a wife, affluent ennui, homosexuality) and how the score is a rejection of the ear-grabbing (and commercially successful) music of his younger composing days — not just “Trouble in Tahiti” but pop operettas like “West Side Story” and “Candide.”

Unlike NYCO’s gala opening last year, Wednesday’s opening night featured almost no bold-faced names — and there were lots of seats empty throughout the Koch Theatre.  Bernstein’s final opera had to come to New York at some point, but this revival is unlikely to truly revive much outside interest in this funereal piece. 

Of course, Dudamel’s love for “Lenny” will no doubt result in much more Bernstein in seasons to come (in January, the Dude conducts Bernstein’s Symphony #1at Disney Hall), but while you might hear the melodies of “Trouble in Tahiti” on a future program, don’t expect him to bring the music of “A Quiet Place” any time soon. 

— James C. Taylor

[Updated: An earlier version of this story said that Dudamel would be conducting Bernstein's Symphony No. 7 at Disney Hall in January. He will conducting Beethoven's Symphony No. 7.]

Photo: The chorus of "A Quiet Place." Credit: © Carol Rosegg.

Photo: Undated photo of Bernstein. Credit: Erich Auerbach/Getty Images.

 RECENT AND RELATED:

A Culture Monster event with Placido Domingo and Gustavo Dudamel

Music review: L.A. Phil embraces a new generation with Dudamel

Los Angeles Philharmonic announces 2010-11 season: 12 weeks of Dudamel

Music review: Dudamel takes on Bernstein and Gershwin at the Bowl

Opera review: Gustavo Dudamel conducts 'Carmen' at the Hollywood Bowl

Gustavo Dudamel finds time to unwind in L.A.

hyperunsure in Sem categoria on outubro 31 2010 » 0 comments

Condo Financing and Mortgage Information

Condos on the Lakeshore by Mute*

Myrtle Beach Foreclosures

Chances are, if you decided to get into shape you wouldn’t tell anyone right away. After a few weeks of running, dieting and lifting weights, when you start to see some results and people noticed, you would let the cat out of the bag. It feels sort of foolish to talk about it until you have taken some action.

Making a career change is the same way. This creates a conundrum: how do you get started if you don’t want to talk to anyone about it until you’ve done something? Forget the “starting a law firm” websites – you probably already know that you need a telephone and letterhead. So what is the first step?

The best place to start is to define your niche. This includes determining the services you will offer, the types of clients you will seek, your pricing strategy, your staffing and recruitment approach and your management structure. These will often change from your current platform. Focus on how you will be different from the competition. For those leaving Biglaw, a “vertical niche” strategy is often the way to go.

The next step is to put together a detailed financial forecast. This allows you to project the profitability and income you can expect to generate. It’s not much more complicated than estimating your revenue and then subtracting all of the expenses you anticipate. You can increase the precision of your revenue forecast by breaking it into small pieces. Try to project revenue by client, or by matter, or by task. On the expense lines, be sure to research and re-research costs to make sure that you haven’t overlooked anything. Then add some cushion, because you are bound to forget something.

The last thing to consider is whether you want a partner or not. A successful practice requires business development, professional development, business management and a leader who will motivate the team. If you are all of these things, then you can slap your name on the door and be done. If not, consider the types of partners you need to attract, how you will recruit them and where you are comfortable ceding control. Many firms go under because partners cannot get along, and many more fold because they are missing these ingredients needed for a successful practice.

Now you are ready to go public with your plans to start a firm. As you approach potential clients, partners and employees, focus on the differentiators and invite them into the thought process. The more people who take emotional ownership of your idea, the more likely it is to succeed.

If you are an in-house or Biglaw attorney, starting a firm might be the best career path for you. Contact NexFirm and we will give you the tools to decide. 646-666-8989 or www.nexfirm.com

Chances are, if you decided to get into shape you wouldn’t tell anyone right away. After a few weeks of running, dieting and lifting weights, when you start to see some results and people noticed, you would let the cat out of the bag. It feels sort of foolish to talk about it until you have taken some action.

Making a career change is the same way. This creates a conundrum: how do you get started if you don’t want to talk to anyone about it until you’ve done something? Forget the “starting a law firm” websites – you probably already know that you need a telephone and letterhead. So what is the first step?

The best place to start is to define your niche. This includes determining the services you will offer, the types of clients you will seek, your pricing strategy, your staffing and recruitment approach and your management structure. These will often change from your current platform. Focus on how you will be different from the competition. For those leaving Biglaw, a “vertical niche” strategy is often the way to go.

The next step is to put together a detailed financial forecast. This allows you to project the profitability and income you can expect to generate. It’s not much more complicated than estimating your revenue and then subtracting all of the expenses you anticipate. You can increase the precision of your revenue forecast by breaking it into small pieces. Try to project revenue by client, or by matter, or by task. On the expense lines, be sure to research and re-research costs to make sure that you haven’t overlooked anything. Then add some cushion, because you are bound to forget something.

The last thing to consider is whether you want a partner or not. A successful practice requires business development, professional development, business management and a leader who will motivate the team. If you are all of these things, then you can slap your name on the door and be done. If not, consider the types of partners you need to attract, how you will recruit them and where you are comfortable ceding control. Many firms go under because partners cannot get along, and many more fold because they are missing these ingredients needed for a successful practice.

Now you are ready to go public with your plans to start a firm. As you approach potential clients, partners and employees, focus on the differentiators and invite them into the thought process. The more people who take emotional ownership of your idea, the more likely it is to succeed.

If you are an in-house or Biglaw attorney, starting a firm might be the best career path for you. Contact NexFirm and we will give you the tools to decide. 646-666-8989 or www.nexfirm.com

hyperunsure in Sem categoria on outubro 29 2010 » 0 comments

The Best Wineries in California

P1020120r3 California Wine Country Sonoma Valley by studiod_baltico1

Murrells Inlet SC

T.J. Rodgers, CEO of Cypress Semiconductor, is set to become the hero of TechEye for 2010 after spending his days and technology genius developing a chip that can make the perfect red wine.

According to The Wall Street Journal, Rodgers is spending a small fortune hto bring technology’s finest thinking to the wine-making process.

He has set up 152 stainless-steel fermentation tanks at the University of California which are packed full of techie gadgets.

The idea is to monitor the wine as if it were a patient on life support. The tanks send data wirelessly to the winery’s computers. Messages like “too hot” or “sugar high” are placed in a central network which works out what will be the best for the booze.

Rodgers has already created a hydraulic-powered fermenter and his next project will use light to determine what is happening inside the wine. The winery uses some screw caps and some corks on its bottles, and wants to see whether there are long-term differences in how the wines with the different tops age, apparently

But it is his chip makers that have helped the most. He tried and failed three times to construct a programmable version of a device called a brix meter, which measures the sugar level in fermenting wine.

Rodgers called up some Cypress engineers and asked them to solve the problem. They prototyped brix sensor using the company’s chips and other technology and another team figured out how to relay the measurements wirelessly. Within a week, the teams had prototypes. 

“It’s superior to wine,” claims Charles W. Bamforth, the Anheuser-Busch endowed professor of malting and brewing sciences at the University of California-Davis and author of Beer: Health and Nutrition. “There’s more nutritive value in beer and it has the same beneficial impact.”

But not all brews are equal. On the heels of Oktoberfest and with football season in full swing, The Daily Beast decided to determine which beers may not be the best for the buzz. Specifically, the beers were ranked based on which packed the most calories and carbohydrates for the least amount of alcoholic punch.

To ensure a wide range of beers were considered, we looked at the offerings of the largest 15 domestic breweries and the largest five international breweries based on import volume to the U.S. Our final list was whittled further so that no more than three variations of brews from a single brand of beer was included in the top 50. We used data from the manufacturers when available, using reliable third party databases if necessary.

Get a head start with the Morning Scoop email. It’s your Cheat Sheet with must reads from across the Web. Get it.

For inquiries, please contact The Daily Beast at editorial@thedailybeast.com.

California wineries

hyperunsure in Sem categoria on outubro 22 2010 » 0 comments

Best Places to travel in the United States

Travel photography - Nikon by Mindstormphotos

Myrtle Beach Foreclosures

Perhaps the greatest reward of travel is that whenever our bodies are in motion, so are our minds. I’ve just written a book about the strengths of this built-in link: In Motion: The Experience of Travel. Along the way I’ve found that the “inside” of travel can be even more fascinating than its “outside.” Wherever we go, as I’ve been discovering — around the block or across the globe — we all carry within us a largely unsuspected capacity that, when activated, produces more vivid and more memorable trips. This holds true both for routine travel — the “have-to” trips of every day — and for more extraordinary “want-to” travel, whether that involves a quick getaway or a dream vacation.

For some people, who can see no other solution, enduring the routine and boredom of daily “have-to” travel has been made more tolerable by looking forward to long-planned “want-to” trips — almost as if pain accumulated now can at some point be exchanged for pleasure. Such a strategy is, unfortunately, increasingly less viable. Although the available statistics are probably already outdated (and, when it comes to commuting, that generally means that things only have “dis-improved” in the meantime), according to a 2005 ABC poll, American workers spend an average of 87 minutes a day driving to and from their jobs and running errands. Aggregate these numbers and the “have-to” part of travel already outweighs the “want-to” part, since 87 minutes a day amounts to more than two-and-a-half weeks out of each year, already overshadowing the standard two-week vacation.

Fortunately, a solution to this problem is closer to us than our own fingertips. I call it Deep Travel. Part of our inheritance as a species is a sophisticated and ancient part of our minds that’s perhaps two million years old, a wider awareness in which nothing is taken for granted and everything we encounter seems fresh and new and awaiting discovery. It is like waking up while we’re already awake. One of the allures of time-off travel is that on vacation we slip more easily into Deep Travel, and notice more than normal, giving the people and places we encounter an intensity and glow.

What I’ve been delighted to find while working on In Motion — in my own daily travels and on longer trips I’ve undertaken; in conversation with people met along the way; in the books of the great travel writers that I’ve been devouring; and in pioneering modern studies of the mind and brain — is that Deep Travel is constantly available, at our command and under our control, and not something we have to hope to catch up with once we’ve left daily cares behind. One friend, for instance, shared with me the “Warsaw induction,” as he called it — a foolproof way of evoking Deep Travel under almost any circumstances. We were lunching in a Madison Avenue coffee shop, and he said:

Look around. What if this wasn’t New York, but Warsaw (or any city you’ve never been to before). You’d have to start noticing everything all at once, wouldn’t you, because you wouldn’t know what was important and what could be ignored, at least for the moment. Deep Travel would be an imperative.

Maybe 87 minutes a day of daily travel is an exaggeration: let’s pare it down and call it only an hour. Why shouldn’t that hour be as important to our lives and as fulfilling and enriching as the other hours of the waking day? That’s my cause and concern at the moment — to Reclaim the Lost Hour! I’ve set up a new Web site where Deep Travelers can share their findings, and I look forward to hearing your thoughts.

Subject: WEEKEND GUIDANCE AND PRESS SCHEDULE FOR SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16, AND SUNDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2010
Attachments:
View As Web Page

THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary

_______________________________________________________________________________________

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

October 15, 2010

WEEKEND GUIDANCE AND PRESS SCHEDULE FOR

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16 AND SUNDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2010

On Saturday, the President will travel to Boston, Massachusetts. There will be travel pool coverage of the President’s departure from the White House. The arrival at the Boston-Logan International Airport will be open press. Later, the President will deliver remarks at a rally for Governor Deval Patrick at the Hynes Convention Center in Boston in West Newton, Massachusetts. This event will be open press. Later, the President will deliver remarks at an event for the DSCC at a private residence. There will be print pool coverage of the President’s remarks. The President will return to Washington, DC in the evening. The departure from Boston-Logan International Airport is open press. There will be travel pool coverage of the President’s arrival at the White House.

On Sunday, the President and the First Lady will travel to Cleveland, Ohio. There will be travel pool coverage of the departure from the White House. The arrival at the Cleveland-Hopkins International Airport is open press. In the afternoon, the President and the First Lady will attend an event for Governor Strickland at a private residence in Cleveland, Ohio.

The President and the First Lady will then travel to Columbus, Ohio. The President and the First Lady will attend a fundraiser for the DNC at Ohio State University. This event is closed press. Later, the President and the First Lady will deliver remarks at a rally for the DNC at Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio. This event is open press. The President and the First Lady will return to Washington, DC at night. The departure from Ports-Columbus International Airport and the arrival on the South Lawn are open press.

Saturday’s In-Town Travel Pool

Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg

Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP

TV Corr & Crew: FOX

Print: NY Times

Radio: Talk Radio

Saturday’s Out-of-Town Travel Pool

Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg

Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP

TV Corr & Crew: FOX

Print: Dallas Morning News

Sunday’s In-Town Travel Pool

Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg

Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP

TV Corr & Crew: NBC

Print: Politico

Radio: VOA

Sunday’s Out-of-Town Travel Pool

Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg

Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP

TV Corr & Crew: NBC

Print: Washington Post

Saturday, October 16, 2010

EDT

9:00AM In-Town Travel Pool Call Time

12:20PM THE PRESIDENT departs the White House

In-Town Travel Pool Coverage (Gather Time 12:00PM – North Doors of the Palm Room)

12:55PM THE PRESIDENT departs Andrews Air Force Base en route Boston, Massachusetts

Out-of-Town Travel Pool Coverage (Call Time 11:20AM – Virginia Gate, Andrews Air Force Base)

2:05PM THE PRESIDENT arrives in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Boston-Logan International Airport

Open Press

3:15PM THE PRESIDENT delivers remarks at a rally for Governor Deval Patrick

Hynes Convention Center, Boston, Massachusetts

Open Press

5:15PM THE PRESIDENT delivers remarks at a DSCC event

Private Residence, West Newton, Massachusetts

Print Pool Coverage

6:15PM THE PRESIDENT departs Boston, Massachusetts en route Andrews Air Force Base

Boston-Logan International Airport

Open Press

7:35PM THE PRESIDENT arrives at Andrews Air Force Base

Out-of-Town Travel Pool Coverage

8:55PM THE PRESIDENT arrives at the White House

In-Town Travel Pool Coverage (Gather Time 6:00PM – North Doors of the Palm Room)

Sunday, October 17, 2010

EDT

7:45AM In-Town Travel Pool Call Time

1:30PM THE PRESIDENT and THE FIRST LADY depart the White House

In-Town Travel Pool Coverage (Gather Time 1:10PM – North Doors of the Palm Room)

2:00PM THE PRESIDENT and THE FIRST LADY depart Andrews Air Force Base en route Cleveland, Ohio

Out-of-Town Travel Pool Coverage (Call Time 12:30PM – Virginia Gate, Andrews Air Force Base)

3:10PM THE PRESIDENT and THE FIRST LADY arrive in Cleveland, Ohio

Cleveland-Hopkins International Airport

Open Press

4:35PM THE PRESIDENT delivers remarks at a reception for Governor Ted Strickland; THE FIRST LADY also attends

Private Residence, Cleveland, Ohio

Print Pool Coverage

5:55PM THE PRESIDENT and THE FIRST LADY depart Cleveland, Ohio en route Columbus, Ohio

Cleveland-Hopkins International Airport

Open Press

6:35PM THE PRESIDENT and THE FIRST LADY arrive in Columbus, Ohio

Ports-Columbus International Airport

Open Press

7:10PM THE PRESIDENT and THE FIRST LADY attend a DNC fundraiser

Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio

Closed Press

8:00PM THE PRESIDENT and THE FIRST LADY deliver remarks at a DNC Rally

Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio

Open Press

9:15PM THE PRESIDENT and THE FIRST LADY depart Columbus, Ohio en route Andrews Air Force Base

Ports-Columbus International Airport

Open Press

10:20PM THE PRESIDENT and THE FIRST LADY arrive at Andrews Air Force Base

Out-of-Town Travel Pool Coverage

10:35PM THE PRESIDENT and THE FIRST LADY arrive at the White House

South Lawn

Open Press (Pre-set 10:05PM – Final Gather 10:20PM – North Doors of the Palm Room)

Schedule for the Week of October 18, 2010

On Monday, the President will host the White House Science Fair celebrating the winners of a broad range of science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) competitions. In the evening, the President will attend an event for the DSCC in Rockville, Maryland.

On Tuesday, the President will sign an Executive Order to renew the White House Initiative on Educational Excellence for Hispanics at the White House.

On Wednesday, the President will meet with his national security team for his monthly meeting on Afghanistan and Pakistan in the Situation Room. Later, the President will travel to Portland, Oregon to attend a fundraiser and a rally for Gubernatorial candidate John Kitzhaber. The President will then travel to Seattle, where he will spend the night.

On Thursday, the President will hold an event in Seattle, and will then attend a rally for Senator Murray. Later, the President will travel to San Francisco, California. In the evening, the President will attend a dinner for the DNC. The President will spend the night in San Francisco.

On Friday, the President will travel to Los Angeles, California where he will attend events for Senator Barbara Boxer and for the DNC. Later, the President will travel to Las Vegas, Nevada where he will attend an event for the DNC and later an event for Senator Reid and the DSCC. The President will spend the night in Las Vegas.

On Saturday, the President will travel to Minneapolis, Minnesota to attend an event for Gubernatorial candidate Mark Dayton, and will then attend an event for the DCCC. The President will return to Washington, DC in the evening.

###

Myrtle Beach Rentals

hyperunsure in Sem categoria on outubro 21 2010 » 0 comments

Make a Visit to South Carolina

Jellyfish on the beach, Hilton Head, South Carolina by g2pix

Murrells Inlet Property Management


Ronald Martinez/Getty Images

Two weeks into the NFL season, two contenders from a season ago are already in some trouble. Both the Cowboys and Vikings have gotten off to a rough start. Can they recover?

1. New Orleans Saints (1): 2-0. That was a good win in San Francisco, it wasn’t easy, but the defending champs kept on rolling.

2. Indianapolis Colts (2): 1-1. The Colts responded to their week one loss in a big way, dominating the Giants in The Manning Bowl. Next they turn their attention to the Broncos in Denver.

3. Green Bay Packers (5): 2-0. They dominated the Bills as expected, and Aaron Rodgers was spot on. They now must travel to Chicago on Monday night to play a Bears team coming off a big win in Dallas.

4. Houston Texans (7): 2-0. This Texans team is different than years past. That comeback win in Washington tells a lot. Matt Schaub had 497 yards passing. Wow. 

5. Pittsburgh Steelers (10): 2-0. The scary thing about the Steelers is that they could be 4-0 by the time Ben Roethlisberger comes back. 

6. Baltimore Ravens (3): 1-1. New season, same result versus the Bengals. Joe Flacco was terrible, throwing four interceptions. They’ll rebound at home against the Browns. 

7. New York Jets (9): 1-1. If Mark Sanchez can play like that, then the Jets have a chance to compete for a super bowl title. That was a big win for this team.

 

8. New England Patriots (4): 1-1. As Tom Brady so clearly pointed out in his interview, the Patriots were terrible in the second half, and could not get anything going. I feel sorry for the Bills this week. 

9. Miami Dolphins (17): 2-0. The Dolphins defense has played tremendous the first two weeks of the season. This is a team that wants to be taken seriously in the AFC East. A win against the Jets on Sunday night would accomplish that task.

10. Cincinnati Bengals (12): 1-1. The Bengals rebounded nicely to their blow out loss in week one. Until someone beats them in the AFC North, it’s their division to lose. 

11. Washington Redskins (11): 1-1. The Redskins let the game slip away in a game they had no business losing. The defense struggled late. 

12. Atlanta Falcons (15): 1-1. The Falcons dominated the Cardinals all game long and now must travel to New Orleans in an NFC South battle. 

13. San Diego Chargers (16): 1-1. The defense harassed David Garrard, causing four interceptions. Antonio Gates is on pace for a huge year. 

14. Chicago Bears (25): 2-0. Mike Martz and Jay Cutler look like they are making a great team in Chicago. A win against the Packers monday night will let the NFC North know they are in it to win it.

Gamecocks strike with in-state SG

By Antonio Curro – Midwest PUNKS Editor

South Carolina struck big on the recruiting trail on Thursday and this time it was in their own state as sharpshooting South Carolina native Damien Leonard of J.L. Mann High School (SC) verbally committed to the Gamecocks.  A consensus top 100 prospect nationally, Leonard played with the Team Power program during the grassroots travel season.

Note:  Antonio Curro is the National Recruiting Editor for NY2LASPORTS.COM and the Midwest PUNKS Editor for SLAM Magazine

hyperunsure in Sem categoria on outubro 19 2010 » 0 comments
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